Türkiye

Human smuggling ring’s base found near PM Orbán’s house

PM Viktor Orbán in power

Authorities found 90 people in a house only hundreds of metres away from PM Viktor Orbán’s family residence. The neighbourhood is ideal for wealthy people, so it is not surprising that former President János Áder’s estate is also there.

According to index.hu, a citizen reported the “human smuggler headquarters” to the police. Officers went to check the property and found 90 people, men, women and children inside. Some said they were Kurdish, others claimed they were Turkish, but no one could prove they were in Hungary legally.

The house is just streets away from the Orbán estate in Cinege Street in Budapest’s 12th district. The neighbourhood is extremely expensive with mansions. János Áder’s villa is also there. The police started an investigation for human smuggling.

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One of the world’s most hated politicians visited Hungary in secret

Erkin Tuniyaz will probably never be among the famous politicians everybody would like to shake hands with. He is a Chinese politician of Uyghur ethnicity, and despite the Beijing government violating the human rights of his people, he is the deputy secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Xinjiang Committee and chairman of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.

Thus, he is not welcome in many parts of the world. However, he was in Hungary in secret between 4 and 6 September. He conducted talks with Márton Nagy, Hungary’s economy development minister and Levente Magyar, Hungary’s foreign secretary, 24.hu wrote. Neither of them communicated the meetings.

Chinese state media outlet People’s Daily reported about the journey. According to the paper, Tuniyaz said in Hungary that everything goes perfectly in Xinjiang. All peoples live in harmony in the region, the poverty no longer exists, the economy skyrockets, and tourists are welcome. Earlier this year, he planned to visit London, Brussels and Paris, but all his official visits were cancelled because of the protests of human rights organisations. In Hungary, such organisations did not even learn about his visit until the media wrote about it yesterday.

Wizz Air’s new timetable is here with many cheap flights

Wizz Air Romania EU

The Hungarian low-cost airline, Wizz Air’s, new 2024 summer timetable arrived with multiple cheap flights. Furthermore, there are directions worth booking already. We summed up everything you should know about it below.

According to okosutas.hu, Wizz Air’s new timetable is surprising since they regularly upload new flights for very high prices. Therefore, no one can find flights worth booking at the beginning. It is not an exaggeration that more than 99% of the new timetable is worth booking only after a while. But things have seemingly changed for the better.

In the case of the Greek islands, there are some very cheap offers for next summer. That means the ticket costs are below EUR 50-60.

For example, you can buy a ticket to Rhodes for only EUR 45  with a 29 June departure. Furthermore, you can travel to Heraklion for only EUR 35 on 20 June or on 27 June. You may reach Corfu with Wizz Air for EUR 45 on 19 June. Moreover, the return flights are also in the EUR 35 category from most places.

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Wizz Air’s 2024 summer timetable has some eye-catching offers even to Türkiye. For instance, you may book your ticket to Antalya for just EUR 30. You should consider that the prices were much higher this summer. Furthermore, Wizz Air flies to the Turkish Riviera from next spring, and prices are competitive until end-May.

Interestingly, they seemingly copied 2023 summer’s timetable concerning multiple routes. For example, to Heraklion, two flights will go next summer. There is a Thursday evening and a Friday morning flight, but no connection during the weekend. Okosutas believes the airline will modify that soon.

The news outlet did not find any new routes next summer. Needless to say, Wizz Air may open and close flights until then since that is how the company works.

Photo gallery: Pakistan Embassy Hungary holds First-Ever Art Exhibition of Pakistani Artists in Budapest

Embassy of Pakistan in Hungary organized the first-ever art exhibition of Pakistani artists in Budapest today. The exhibition titled “ChaharBagh” (four gardens of paradise) showcased artwork of eight Pakistani Artists. The opening ceremony was held on 4 September 2023 and the exhibition will continue till 08 September 2023 at Yunus Emre Institute, Budapest.

The event was organised in cooperation with the Embassy of Türkiye in Hungary and Yunus Emre Institute.

The opening ceremony was attended by a large number of participants including Hungarian dignitaries, members of the Diplomatic Corps, Art enthusiasts, students, and media persons. The Ambassadors of Pakistan and Türkiye along with the Chief Guest Mr. Peter Jakob, Director General Ministry of Foreign Affairs & Trade of Hungary inaugurated the Exhibition.

In his welcoming address, Ambassador Asif Hussain Memon highlighted the theme of exhibition and the rich art tapestry of Pakistan. He also underscored the importance of organizing such art and cultural events regularly to foster cultural exchanges between Pakistan and Hungary. The Ambassador also thanked the Türkish Ambassador for their support.

The Ambassador of Türkiye to Hungary highlighted the historic bond between the Türkiye and Pakistan and expressed support for joint collaborations.

Director General Asia Pacific department, Mr. Péter Jakab, highlighted growing bilateral relations between Hungary and Pakistan in diverse areas including arts and culture and welcomed the Pakistan Embassy’s efforts in this regard.

The guests were treated with traditional Pakistani cuisine and refreshments.

Hungarian minister shared when the parliament can accept Türkiye’s NATO accession

NATO EU Viktor Orbán military kickout

Hungary’s parliament is slated to decide on ratifying Sweden’s accession to NATO this autumn, as the government submitted the relevant documents earlier this year, the foreign minister told Turkish channel TRT World on Monday.

Attempts to resolve disputes with Stockholm have failed so far, he said in the interview, adding that Hungary had become “a target and a victim of this political dispute”, and on the receiving end of interference in its domestic politics. As an ally of Türkiye, Hungary has regularly consulted on Finland and Sweden’s NATO membership with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, he said. While Hungary “does not want to become the obstacle in the way of Swedish NATO membership”, it also considers Türkiye’s interests, because defence alliances must be based on trust, he said.

Regarding the war in Ukraine, Szijjártó said Hungary was in a “singular situation”: some 150,000 Hungarians live in Ukraine, many of whom had been drafted into the Ukrainian army and lost their lives, he said. Hungary urges an immediate ceasefire and peace talks, and refuses to allow weapons deliveries to Ukraine through its territory, he said. The sooner the war ends, the fewer Ukrainians and Ukrainian Hungarians will die, he said.

As a country which time and again had to fight for its freedom, Hungary respects Ukraine’s territorial integrity and sovereignty “unconditionally”, he said. It is also supporting some 1 million refugees who have arrived since the start of the war, he said. Some 1,300 kindergartens and schools have accepted Ukrainian children, and the government is providing health care while working to offer jobs too, he said. Accordingly, Hungary expects Ukraine to restore the rights of its Hungarian minority as they were in 2015 regarding the use of the mother tongue, culture and administration, he said.

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TurkStream helping Hungary

If Ukraine aspires to become a member of the EU, it must accept its values, he said. Szijjártó said it was regrettable that Russia had backed out of the grain export deal earlier this month, despite efforts by Türkiye and “personally President Erdogan” to keep the deal afloat. Hungary has always kept solidarity corridors open, contributing to Ukrainian grain being delivered to African and Middle Eastern countries, he said.

Some of the grain, however, “remained in Hungary” rather than being transported to the countries in need, he said, adding that a glut of cheap Ukrainian grain threatened to ruin Hungarian farmers and markets. The transit routes to other countries remain open during a ban on the trade of Ukrainian grain products in Hungary, he said. Regarding Hungary’s energy security, Szijjártó highlighted the importance of the Trans-Anatolian gas pipeline project. Hungary has helped to build the TurkStream pipeline — alongside Russia, Türkiye, Bulgaria and Serbia — which is now capable of delivering 8.5 billion cubic meters of gas to Hungary, he said.

Hungary started diversifying its energy resources long before the war in Ukraine started, he said. Besides Russia, the most important players to provide Hungary’s energy mix will be Türkiye, Azerbaijan and Qatar, he said.

Under the latest agreement with Turkish gas company BOTAS, Hungary will receive nearly 300 million cubic meters of gas next year, he said. Since Qatar’s order book is full until 2026, negotiations between Hungary and Qatari companies have already started on the purchase of gas in 2027, he added. The delivery of Qatari and Azeri gas would require significant developments in regional infrastructure, but the EU is dragging its feet on providing funding, he said. Instead, regional states like Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Serbia, Greece and Türkiye have started negotiations to enable large deliveries, he said.

PHOTOS: There is a secret Hungarian village in the heart of Türkiye, close to Antalya

Hungarian village in Türkiye

First, Magyar Nemzet, a Hungarian daily, wrote about a secret Hungarian village in the heart of Türkiye where locals believe they are the descendants of the Hungarians and their village’s name is simple: Hungarian village.

Magyar Nemzet Magazine wrote about the secret history of Macarköy (Gebiz). At the 1976 Istanbul conference on the Turkish-Hungarian relationship, a map showed only eight villages of Hungarian origins in Türkiye. Three Macarlar, two Macar, two Macaroglu and one Macara. They are on the shores of the Black Sea or Anatolia. But there was no Macarköy.

Here it is on a map:

Hungarian village in Türkiye

But Ferenc Ispay found it later and published an article about his findings in 1981. He travelled to Istanbul to find a church in Galata where II. Rákóczi Ferenc’s earthly remains waited to be transported back to Hungary in 1906. But he found a new Hungarian village.

Some locals told him their ancestors came 420 years ago from Hungary to Gebze, close to Istanbul. Unsolvable troubles arose with the nearby Circassian village, so they moved away and founded Macarköy. Others believed their ancestors were Hungarian refugees who escaped from the Habsburg oppression or the Russian invaders in 1849.

But the local cemetery bears the name Hungarian cemetery, and there is a Szekler-Hungarian traditional gate in the village. The inscription says Biz Kardesim, we are brothers. HERE and HERE you may find some photos.

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PM Orbán announced when Hungary’s economy would start to grow again

Viktor Orbán

While 2023 was the year of breaking down inflation, 2024 will be dedicated to restarting economic growth, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said in an interview with public broadcaster Kossuth Radio on Friday.

Economic growth thrives amid lower interests on loans, he said. The third and fourth quarters of 2023 will see a “beautiful prologue of that”, but the process is expected to gather real momentum next year, he said. At the same time, keeping jobs and ensuring that every Hungarian can work in Hungary comes before all other considerations, including curbing inflation and economic growth, he said. “We need a work-based society,” he said. Hungary now has 4.8 million jobholders, one million more than in 2010, he said. August could see a sea-change in the real value of wages as raises are expected to reach or even surpass inflation, which is forecast to be at 16 percent, he said.

“We are working tirelessly” to bring down inflation and to raise wages, so that the latter can catch up with growing prices soon after August, he said. The two will “hopefully” be close to each other by December, he said. “We will have a tough autumn,” he said. Orbán said that when Fidesz took over the government in 2010, it embarked in a two-year “damage control period”. The economy was stable by 2012, and wages were growing at a faster clip than inflation every quarter, he said. “We did not see real wages fall for more than a decade,” he added. The first half of 2023 was the first time that trend broke, he said. “That upended family budgets.” The government is now working for the second half of the year to offset the damage of the first half, he said.

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At the same time, employees and employers must agree on the degree of wage hikes, and the government can but assist those negotiations, he said. Unwise measures could cause rising unemployment, he said. Price growth so far has been, at least in part, due to skyrocketing energy prices and European Union sanctions on Russia, Orbánsaid. At the same time, “some of the price raises seem unreasonable, especially in multinational companies,” he said. Multinational companies have kept prices much higher than fair profit would have warranted, he said. “That’s why I call them speculants.”

The government will have to show strength to prevent that from happening, he said. Hungary’s competition office will remain a constant presence in trade, and will wield the tools it has to curb inflation, he said. Regarding the utility price cuts, Orbán said that the measure had left 1,078 billion forints (EUR 2.8bn) with Hungarian families between January-July this year. Every Hungarian family is left with 181,000 forints monthly thanks to the cuts to their energy bills, he said. The European Union sees the measure as “too much, they are of the opinion that Hungarian families should pay more and they want to force that on us,” he said.

Hungarian energy prices are among the lowest in the EU, despite the fact that Hungary has no oil and gas fields, he said. EU leaders are facing scrutiny at home “for making their citizens pay more than Hungarians do . so they attack Hungary,” he said.

“I understand their problem, but I can’t take that into consideration: we must protect the Hungarian utility price caps from Brussels,” he said.

Energy security is key to “any sensible discussion on energy and utility prices”, Orbán said. “If there is no energy, the country, the economy and families grind to a halt.”

Energy security comes before any other consideration, and Peter Szijjarto, the minister of foreign affairs and trade, “has so far done an excellent job” of procuring new resources and conducting international negotiations, he said.

Hungary has achieved an exemption from the EU sanctions hitting Russia, and will have to maintain that exemption for years, he said. The Ukrainians “have thrown in the towel”, and gas deliveries have dwindled through the Druzhba pipeline, he said. “And now they’re saying they will stop altogether in 2024.”

The NordStream pipeline was blown up last year, stopping the deliveries of large quantities of Russian gas, he added. Hungary, which continues to import gas, needed to find an alternative route in the south, he said. “Hence the diplomatic offensive” of the last few days, using the opportunity of the World Athletics Championships, he said.

Türkiye is expected to play a key role in Hungary’s energy supplies in the future, Orbán said, adding that the “tap is in the hands of Türkiye and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan”. All of Hungary’s gas imports go through Türkiye and “if he turns it off, there will be no gas, but if it is open, there will be gas”, Orbán said. As a result, it is vital to strike a deal with Türkiye and “we must be on good terms, and work together in other areas too, if we want to get favourable treatment in energy affairs,” he added.

Energy arrives in Türkiye partly through Azerbaijan, the Azeri president has visited Hungary and Hungary also buys gas from them, Orbán said. He also said that some of the greatest gas reserves in the world are in Turkmenistan and they want to export it to Europe, which “comes in handy for us”. A programme is being prepared on the production of large quantities of electricity in Azerbaijan, which would be brought to Hungary through Georgia and Romania, he said. Cheap electricity could be imported thanks to the cooperation of four countries, he said.

Commenting on talks with Qatar, he said the aim was to enable all European countries to purchase gas transported by boat. He added that he had been involved in three rounds of talks for this purpose. Orbán said he had held consultations with the Emir during the soccer world championships and during the Emir’s recent visit in Hungary, a deal was struck to bring gas from Qatar by boat to Hungary through Croatia.

He said that a country the size of Hungary “cannot afford to be dumb” because “its strength comes from being clever”. Those that look ahead and make plans in good time, will be one step ahead the rest, he added. He said the weight of central Asia was currently growing and the region will most likely play an important role in the next decade. Efforts have been made for over a decade to develop good relations built on common origins and a shared history with these countries and these are now paying off, he added. “We are ahead of others by several years or even an entire decade,” he said.

Orbán also said that people who want to understand the world can participate in the discourse and this will help everyone see the opportunities that Hungary faces. If the opposition helps create quality debates, this could work to the benefit of the country as a whole, he added. He also said that the stadium hosting the World Athletics Championships was “fantastic and friendly”, with audiences and the competitors alike experiencing an atmosphere of fairness where “we are happy to see others’ success and certainly also happy about our own”. The world championships have proven that sports can make very beneficial contributions to people’s quality of life, not only in terms of health but also for community building and creating shared experiences.

The World Athletics Championships and the arena hosting it are among the best in the world, Orbán said. Athletes will spread the good reputation of Hungary worldwide, he said. “Foreigners are now saying we are good hosts, that this is a decent country where everyone is welcome, a friendly country, and . one where the Christian roots of love can still be found,” he said.

The arenas built for sports also serve as venues for other kinds of evens, he said. Puskas Arena saw more concerts this year than football matches, so “the whining about money being squandered and about this being only about sports and the personal hobby of a few people, including the prime minister, is just not true,” he said. Sports venues are community spaces serving all “well-meaning Hungarians” by hosting concerts, conferences and “other huge events”, he said. “The cultural products of the western world don’t stop at Vienna any more, they come to Budapest too,” he added.

Sweden’s NATO ratificaton on agenda at Hungary-Türkiye summit

szijjártó erdogan

Hungary-Türkiye energy cooperation and the ratification of Sweden’s NATO accession were on the agenda of talks in Budapest between Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said on Sunday.

Hungary and Türkiye have maintained a strategic partnership, while the sides agreed earlier to build an even closer cooperation, Szijjártó said.

To that end, Erdogan will again visit Budapest on 18 December to attend a meeting of the high-level strategic council and sign an agreement under which the two countries would cooperate as key strategic partners and  provide mutual aid in emergency situations, he added.

“This shows the dedication of both countries to enhancing cooperation and the fact that both countries clearly profit from this mutual cooperation,” he said.

“Unfortunately, there have been several events recently that make such agreements timely and justified,” he added.

“Türkiye plays an extremely important and indispensable role in securing Hungary’s energy supplies, considering that a significant part of natural gas supplies arrive in Hungary through the TurkStream pipeline,” Szijjártó said.

Türkiye’s role as a transit country will grow even further after the the Hungary-Azerbaijan natural gas transport agreement enters into force and after Turkmen exports start in the direction of Europe,” he added.

Energy cooperation will enter a new phase also because natural gas supplies can start from Türkiye thanks to the finalisation of an agreement between Hungary’s MVM and Türkiye’s Botas on the purchase of 275 million cubic metres of gas in the next years, he said.

“The 275 million cubic metres of gas will contribute to securing the country’s energy supplies and establishing physical natural gas transport links between Türkiye and Hungary,” he added. Additionally, a decision has been made on starting talks about the storage of Turkish gas in Hungary for a fee, he said.

Szijjártó said the ratification of Sweden‘s NATO accession was also discussed and since both the Turkish and Hungarian parliaments are currently in recess, the issue will be returned to the agenda in the autumn.

“We agreed that we would maintain continual consultations and stay in touch, informing each other on the state of parliamentary procedures and their progress,” he said.

Only Eastern autocrats and fallen Western politicians? Orbán met with several former and incumbent leaders

WAC Budapest

Hungarian press slammed PM Viktor Orbán that he would only meet with Eastern autocrats like Central Asian country heads, the President of Türkiye and Serbia, and fallen Western politicians like the former Slovenian prime minister, Janez Jansa, or Sebastian Kurz, Austria’s former chancellor. And it seems no EU or NATO heavyweight leaders will come to Hungary during the third greatest international sports event, the World Athletics Championships.

Orbán holds talks with Azeri president

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán met President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev at a working visit in his office in Budapest on Sunday, Orbán’s press chief said. The talks focused on subjects linked to the security of Hungary and Europe, Bertalan Havasi said. The sides discussed issues linked to energy supplies, physical security, including the war in Ukraine, and steps required to combat economic difficulties, he added.

Similarly to earlier talks with the Turkmen president, energy supplies were a highlighted topic, he said. Hungary is receiving 100 million cubic metres of natural gas from Azerbaijan this year and an agreement has been signed on the storage of 50 million cubic metres of gas in Hungary, also, with physical gas transport links having been established between the two countries, he added. Aliyev is scheduled to attend events of the August 20 national holiday and the World Athletics Championships in Budapest, Havasi said.

Orbán meets Kyrgyzstan leader at working visit

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán held bilateral talks with President of Kyrgyzstan Akylbek Japarov in his office in Budapest on Sunday, Orbán’s press chief said. The sides at the meeting were in agreement that the dynamic political dialogue between their respsective countries offered a good foundation and helped further strengthen cooperation, Bertalan Havasid said. Hungary remains dedicated to continuing these efforts, he added.

They also established that the opening of a Kyrgyz embassy in Budapest and the start of visa issuance at the Hungarian embassy in Bishkek fulfilled expectations, he said. These steps significantly contribute to the development of friendly relations between the people of Hungary and Kyrgyzstan, he added.

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Orbán meets Serbian President Vucic

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán on Sunday held talks with Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic, who is on a working visit in Hungary, Orbán’s press chief said. The sides reviewed political and economic relations between Hungary and Serbia, the situation concerning Western Balkans integration in the European Union, action against illegal migration and joint projects in energy and infrastructure, Bertalan Havasi said. Vucic is scheduled to attend the August 20 national holiday celebrations and visit the World Athletics Championships under way in Budapest, he added.

Orban discusses energy security with Turkmen president

Prime Minister Viktor Orban held talks on Sunday with President of Turkmenistan Serdar Berdimuhamedow who is on a working visit in Budapest, Orban’s press chief said. The meeting had special importance for Hungary’s energy security because consultations are under way with Turkmenistan about a comprehensive energy cooperation agreement, Bertalan Havasi said. An important element of the agreement is that Hungary could be one of the target countries of Turkmen gas exports in the future, he added.

The sides were in agreement that there are untapped opportunities in Hungary-Turkmenistan cooperation in the areas of health care, pharmaceuticals, agriculture, food industry, water management, education, and culture, Havasi said. Berdimuhamedow congratulated to the Hungarian people on the occasion of the Aug. 20 national holiday.

Orbán holds talks with Bosnian leaders

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán held talks with Zeljka Cvijanovic, the Serb member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Milorad Dodik, President of the Republika Srpska, in his office on Sunday, Orbán’s press chief said. Orbán said at the meeting that relations between Hungary and Bosnia and Herzegovina, as well as between Hungary and the Republika Srpska were excellent adding that “we make every effort to increase cooperation, as reflected by projects already started,” Bertalan Havasi said. The three leaders discussed the enhanced measures taken against illegal migration, the strategic importance of the Western Balkans, and its role in securing the stability of Europe, he added.

Press: Autocratic world leaders come to Budapest to meet Orbán

European Union Orbán EU

The World Athletics Championships starting in Budapest on Saturday will bring a frenzy of diplomatic activity to Budapest, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said on Friday. Among others, the presidents of Serbia, Türkiye, Azerbaijan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan, as well as the emir of Qatar are scheduled to pay working visits during the championships, the minister told a press conference. Szeretlek Magyarország said half the world’s authocratic leaders are to visit Hungary and Orbán.

Cooperation instead of war

The programme will also include talks with several Western Balkan leaders such as the president of the Bosnian Serb Republic, a representative of the presidency of Bosnia, as well as former heads of state from Czechia, Austria, and Slovenia, he said. Szijjártó highligted recent “environmentally friendly, sustainable, and large-scale sports infrastructure developments” which have created suitable conditions to host “one of the world’s largest sports events”, and called those efforts “the shared achievement of all Hungarians”.

The championships being hosted in Hungary are “especially important now, when sports could lead to cooperation and links between nations at a time of conflict and war“. The world being divided into blocs again was “bad news”, he said, adding however that “the news about new links can best be conveyed by sports”. Concerning the agenda for prime ministerial talks during the championships, Szijjártó said energy supplies, physical security — focusing on the war in Ukraine and migration — as well as fighting economic difficulties would be on the agenda.

Referring to Qatar, Szijjártó noted the country is the world’s largest LNG exporter, and could offer LNG supplies to Hungary from 2027. He added that relevant talks are under way. Hungary and Qatar are in close cooperation in international organisations, and are planning to sign a diplomatic cooperation agreement, he added.

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Energy discussions

Issues around energy supplies will also be in the focus of talks with the presidents of Azerbaijan, Türkiye, Turkmenistan, and Serbia, Szijjártó said. Türkiye is already key for Hungary in terms of natural gas deliveries, while its role will further increase when resources from Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan are involved, he said. Talks on purchasing natural gas from Türkiye are “at an advanced stage”, with an actual agreement in sight after the August 20 talks, he added. Szijjártó noted that 100 million cubic meters of Azeri natural gas will be delivered this year, and supply of 50 million cubic meters of gas for storage in Hungary is under way as part of a previous agreement, adding that diversification was now becoming “a physical reality”.

Talks with Turkmenistan on a wide-ranging energy cooperation deal are also under way, he said, adding that Hungary would be among target countries for future Turkmen gas exports. Also, a Hungary-Serbia regional natural gas trading company will start operating in September and would contribute to the region’s energy security, he said. Meanwhile, commenting on Republika Srpska in Bosnia, Szijjártó said attempts were being made in the West, “by actors of the international liberal mainstream”, to disable its elected leaders, which he termed “extremely dangerous . due to the risk of destabilisation and unrest”. He said pressure was being put on the Bosnian-Serb president in respect of the functioning of the Bosnian Constitutional Court.

Orbán: Budapest is a must-visit city

The World Athletics Championships and other similar top sporting events send a message to the world that Budapest is “must-visit” city, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán told public radio on Friday.

Orbán said sports events were a boon economically but more importantly focused the world’s attention on the host country.

After hosting a string of top events over the past few years, Hungary is now “within arm’s reach of hosting a Champions League Final“, he added, thanking the organisers and volunteers for their work.

Meanwhile, the prime minister noted that he will host a dozen official bilateral meetings on the sidelines of the athletics championships and the 20 August national holiday, referring to meetings with the Turkish president, the Serbian president and the Emir of Qatar and “political friends” from Central Asia region such as Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Turkmenistan. Meetings will also take place with business representatives from all over the world, largely from western Europe and China, he said.

Surprise guest to attend August 20 celebrations in Budapest

Chain Bridge at night

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accepted Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s invitation to pay a working visit to Budapest on August 20, the prime minister’s press chief said on Friday.

The Hungarian-Turkish summit will be held at Orbán’s office, and issues on the agenda include security, the defence industry and economic affairs. The sides will also prepare groundwork for the next meeting of the Hungarian-Turkish high-level strategic cooperation council to be held at the end of this year.

Minister shared when Hungary might approve Sweden’s NATO accession

Sweden NATO accession minister

The partnership between the European Union and Türkiye must be “closer than ever” to boost the continent’s physical and energy security, and improve its ailing competitiveness, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said on Friday, after meeting his Turkish counterpart, Hakan Fidan. The newly appointed minister’s first official visit lead to Hungary, proving the country’s crucial place in the Turkish foreign policy.

Szijjártó told a joint press conference after the talks that it was a “great honour and friendly gesture… and proof of strategic relations” that Hungary was the first country Hadan visited after he was appointed foreign minister. Türkiye’s weight in the world is larger than ever in the “new geopolitical and world economic era”, and the country is key to the physical and energy security of Hungary and the whole of Europe, Szijjártó said. “As with its politics Brussels is constantly increasing migration pressure on our southern border, it is highly important that Türkiye should mitigate it,” he said, according to a statement by the foreign ministry, MTI wrote.

“Should Türkiye not take border protection seriously, should it not keep the some million migrants there, the pressure on the external borders of the EU, and so on Hungary, would become unbearable,” he said. Szijjártó praised Ankara’s migrant policy, noting the financial burden posed by related border protection measures. “We can understand this problem because we have also spent several hundreds of billions of forints on border protection, and got only 1 percent of it reimbursed by the EU,” the foreign minister said.

Türkye-Hungary energy cooperation

Türkiye is also of paramount importance in terms of Hungary’s energy security, as most of Russian natural gas imported by the country arrives via the TurkStream pipeline, he said. Without that, meeting Hungary’s energy demands would become impossible, he said. Hungary has received some 2 billion cubic metres of gas via TurkStream this year already, a great boost to winter reserves, said Szijjártó. Hungary’s gas reserves are 48 percent full, compared with the EU’s average of 25 percent, he said. Talks are under way on Hungary’s direct purchases from Türkiye, which would make Türkiye inevitable when diversifying Hungarian energy resources, the foreign minister said.

An agreement was also reached on a close cooperate in the nuclear energy sector, he said, highlighting the importance of experience exchange especially because the two countries are simultaneously constructing nuclear power plants that are using the same technology, he said. Europe, with its waning competitiveness, needs cooperation with Türkiye, which could soon become one of the ten largest economies in the world, he said. Letting such a relationship wither would be a “huge luxury”, he added.

When can Sweden join the NATO?

“That is why we call for returning to mutual respect and honesty in EU-Türkiye cooperation, and to forge a partnership stronger than ever…”, Szijjártó said. Szijjártó also called for updating the EU-Türkiye customs union and to grant Turkish citizens a visa waiver as soon as possible. The minister also touched on the war in Ukraine, saying that the conflict had “no solution on the battlefield” and thanking Türkiye for “the only successful mediation in last year’s grain exports deal”.

Regarding protests in Denmark and Sweden where demonstrators burnt copies of the Q’ran, Szijjártó said Hungary’s government saw the desecration of books and symbols of any religion as “unacceptable”. “Citing freedom of expression when holy books of any religion are being burnt is not only unacceptable but outrageously cynical. I think it is a reasonable expectation towards every government here in Europe that they prevent the desecration of religious symbols,” he said.

Sweden’s NATO accession has been pending for a year because of Hungary’s and Türkiye’s delay. Concerning that issue, he said the two countries regularly informed each other. However, the decision is in the hands of the Hungarian parliament. The government submitted their bill, so it depends on the MPs of Fidesz when there will be a law about Stockholm’s NATO membership, 444.hu wrote.

PHOTOS, VIDEO: Turkish foreign minister decorated with high Hungarian state award

Turkish foreign minister decorated (Copy)

Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó on Thursday handed over the Order of Merit of Hungary, Middle Cross with Star, civilian division, to his Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu, for “deepening the friendship between the two countries”.

A statement from the foreign ministry quoted Szijjártó as referring to the “unprecedented challenges” of the recent past, such as the financial, migration, and health crises, as well as the war in Ukraine. “When such troubles occur … you will know who is a true friend,” Szijjártó said, adding that Cavusoglu had “always been a true friend to Hungary and hopefully he will stay so.”

Szijjártó said he had met his counterpart in 2015 for the first time, for talks on a possible transit for Hungary’s gas supplies through Türkiye, which “seemed utopistic at the time”. “But today, if it was not for the Turk Stream pipeline, we could not import gas via Türkiye, and could not talk about a secure energy supply for Hungary,” he insisted. Among the achievements, he also mentioned lifting the visa requirement between the two countries.

“Another important cornerstone of our friendship is that both countries’ foreign strategies are built on mutual respect,” Szijjártó said, adding that while Türkiye was a world power, during his talks he had never felt that “representatives of countries from two different dimensions are talking to each other”.

Turkish-Swedish NATO deal is done, but when will the Hungarian Parliament vote on it?

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Lithuania organised a successful summit in Vilnius and very important decisions were taken, Zsolt Németh told in connection with the recently concluded NATO summit.

The chairman of the Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee said it was “extremely gratifying that after the agreement with Finland, the Turkish-Swedish agreement has now been concluded”.

Hungary, by the way, I think, has served this with its own approach. We have reason to be pleased that we have managed to bring this to a successful conclusion, He said InfoRádió, and later reiterated that “close Hungarian cooperation with Turkey has contributed to the conclusion of this agreement”.

According to the Fidesz politician, the approach of conducting peace diplomacy has received its most serious contribution as a result of this NATO summit. “We have taken a big step towards peace with this summit”, he stressed.

On the need for an extraordinary session of parliament to ensure that Hungary is not the last country to ratify Sweden’s accession, Zsolt Németh said:

I don’t see the need. The negotiations on this issue will start now, but I would like to point out that the Turkish Grand National Assembly will meet on 1 October and will put the issue of the ratification of Sweden’s accession to NATO as a top priority on the agenda of the session following 1 October. We will start work in mid-September,”

he noted.

As we wrote before, Lithuania’s capital, Vilnius, hosted NATO’s latest summit, which US President Joe Biden and Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, also attended. Prior to taking the family photo, Biden shook hands with only one country leader, Orbán – VIDEO

Hungary Agriculture minister urges extending Ukraine grain exports deal

István Nagy, Hungary’s minister of agriculture met his Turkish counterpart Ibrahim Yumakli in Ankara, and urged that the agreement concerning Ukraine’s grain exports by sea should be “extended and rolled out” to ensure that Ukrainian grain “could again reach southern Europe, Africa, and the Middle East through traditional routes,” the agriculture ministry said on Tuesday.

Nagy pointed to market difficulties and challenges for farmers due to an “influx” of Ukrainian grain shipped through the European Union’s “Solidarity Corridor”. He said the Hungarian government continued to support that idea, but warned that “the corridor has not met expectations and proved insufficient to replace Black Sea shipping”. The difficulties will only be removed if grain from Ukraine will again be shipped through the traditional routes, he insisted.

Nagy pointed to a “historic resonsibility” and said extending the agreement and releasing more Ukrainian ports than the current three from the blocade would “both serve protection of the European countries affected and meeting the demands of needy developing countries”. Or else, he warned, Europe’s grain markets could be paralysed and uncertainties of food supplies could force more and more people to leave their homeland “resulting in increased migratory pressure and greater tension”.

The minister also invited his Türkish counterpart for further talks in Hungary.

NATO summit: PM Orbán urges peace over weapons in Ukraine

Viktor Orbán NATO

Peace, rather than weapons are needed in Ukraine, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said in a video posted on Facebook on Tuesday.

The prime minister highlighted the Russia-Ukraine war as the most important topic on the agenda of the two-day NATO summit that began in Vilnius.

“The Hungarian position which we will be representing is unchanged: it is peace, rather than weapons, that should be delivered to Ukraine,” Orbán said, calling for a ceasefire and an urgent start to peace talks.

“The Hungarian position is clear, since the war is happening next door to us and because of the Hungarians living in Transcarpathia, tens of thousands of Hungarians are in direct danger,” he said.

Hungary wants NATO to stick to its earlier position, he said, arguing that NATO was a defence alliance. It was established to protect its member states, not to carry out military operations on other countries’ territories, Orbán said.

Hungary’s position is currently fully in line with that of NATO, as the alliance is not sending troops or weapons and is not training troops for combat, but is focused on bolstering the defence capabilities of its own members, he said.

“This is necessary, it is correct and Hungary will support this,” the prime minister said.

Orbán holds talks with S Korea President Yoon

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán discussed opportunities for boosting cooperation between Hungary and South Korea with South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on the sidelines of the ongoing NATO summit.

The two leaders were in agreement that South Korea has been one of the biggest foreign investors in Hungary in recent years, with the two countries having achieved new records in bilateral trade, Bertalan Havasi told MTI.

Orbán reaffirmed Hungary’s intention of further boosting economic ties in areas such as nuclear energy and the defence industry.

Orbán and Yoon highlighted their countries’ “deep-rooted” relations, saying Hungary and South Korea should further strengthen their cooperation in education and culture as well.

Szijjárto: Orbán , Erdogan discuss Sweden’s accession

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan have discussed Sweden’s accession to NATO and will continue to hold talks on the matter, the foreign minister said on Tuesday.
“A historic NATO summit is under way in Vilnius where we will most certainly succeed in making a responsible decision with which we will avoid escalating the war,” Peter Szijjarto said on Facebook.

Meanwhile, he said Ukraine was not getting either an invitation or a timetable to join the alliance.

HIA sends container baths to earthquake victims

The Hungarian Interchurch Aid (HIA) has sent 9 containers with washing facilities and lavatories to Iskenderun, in southwest Turkiye, to a refuge for victims of the earthquakes in the region in February this year which killed nearly 60,000 in Türkiye and Syria.

Five months after the disaster, some 1.6 million people live in tent cities without sanitation in Türkiye, HIA said. The organisation is also providing psychologists and animators for group activities to improve the psycho-social status of the displaced people, who are expected to be forced to live in temporary housing for years, the statement said.

HIA has been present at the site since the 7.8 earthquake hit on February 6, the statement said.

Hungarian agriculture minister holds talks with Türkish ambassador

István Nagy, the minister of agriculture, on Thursday discussed the safe Black Sea export of Ukrainian grain with Gulsen Karanis Eksioglu, Turkiye’s ambassador to Hungary, his ministry said in a statement.

At the talks, Nagy said Türkiye played a key role in enforcing the Black Sea grain export deal to ship Ukrainian agricultural products to their traditional markets.

Hungary will ask Ankara for its cooperation in expanding the number of Black Sea ports with security guarantees, the ministry cited Nagy as saying.

The minister noted that the influx of Ukrainian grain to Europe had crippled the market. Because the Black Sea ports were closed due to the Russia-Ukraine war, Ukrainian grain had to be moved out of the country by land, but the so-called solidarity lanes opened up for this purpose have not worked as intended, he said.

Grain stores are currently full, and the coming harvest means that the situation has to be resolved as soon as possible, Nagy said.

He said the agriculture ministers of the central and eastern European countries impacted by the grain glut were in agreement on how to resolve the situation.

The ministry said Nagy was prepared to discuss their proposals with his Türkish counterpart as well.

Nagy also said Türkiye was a key economic partner and political ally of Hungary, urging a further deepening of bilateral ties.